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UGANDA 2012 HUMAN RIGHTS REPORT 



EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 

Uganda is a constitutional republic led since 1986 by President Yoweri Museveni 
of the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM) party. Voters reelected 
Museveni to a fourth five-year term in February 201 1 . While the election marked 
an improvement over previous elections, it was marred by irregularities. State 
security forces (SSF) generally reported to civilian authorities. 

The three most serious human rights problems in the country were a lack of respect 
for the integrity of the person (including unlawful killings, torture, and other abuse 
of suspects and detainees); unwarranted restrictions on civil liberties (including 
freedom of assembly, the media, and association); and violence and discrimination 
against marginalized groups such as women (including female genital 
mutilation/cutting (FGM/C), children (including victims of sexual abuse and ritual 
killing), persons with disabilities, and the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender 
(LGBT) community. 

Other human rights problems included harsh prison conditions; arbitrary and 
politically motivated arrest and detention; incommunicado and lengthy pretrial 
detention; restrictions on the right to a fair trial; restrictions on freedom of press; 
electoral irregularities; official corruption; mob violence; trafficking in persons; 
and forced labor, including child labor. 

The Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), driven out of the country in 2006, continued 
to hold children forcibly abducted from the country. The governments of Uganda, 
South Sudan, the Central African Republic (CAR), and the Democratic Republic of 
the Congo (DRC) continued military actions against the LRA. 

The SSF and other government agents committed human rights abuses, generally 
with impunity. The government took minimal steps to hold perpetrators 
accountable. 

Section 1. Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom from: 
a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life 



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There were several reports the government committed arbitrary or unlawful 
killings. In contrast to the previous year, the SSF did not kill opposition party 
demonstrators. 

The SSF's use of excessive force and live ammunition during joint security 
operations in various districts, including Kampala, Bugiri, Amolatar, and Jinja, 
resulted in at least 13 deaths, according to media reports. 

On January 22, police in Kampala arrested George Agaba, Kampala City Council 
Authority director for physical planning, and his bodyguard, Police Constable 
Santos Makmot Komakech, for killing John Onyango during an eviction in the city 
suburb of Luzira. Komakech allegedly fired his gun to disperse an angry crowd, 
resulting in Onyango' s death. Authorities charged Agaba and Komakech with 
murder but later released them on bail, and their trial was pending at year's end. 

On March 2, police in Masaka District dismissed from duty and arrested Assistant 
Inspector of Police Apollo Bamwesige, officer in charge of Criminal Investigations 
Division (CID) Enock Bategyerize, Sergeant Joseph Migadde, Corporal Anatoli 
Andudia, and Police Constable Peter Bagonza over the alleged killing of a suspect. 
On February 12, the officers reportedly arrested motorcycle driver Swaibu 
Ssemaganda on robbery charges and beat him into a coma. Ssemaganda died in a 
hospital on February 14. The murder case against the police officers was pending 
court hearing at year's end. 

On May 14, authorities in Bugiri District arrested police officers Raymond 
Mallinga and Walter Wandera for killing Fred Jingo along the Bugiri-Tororo Road 
the previous day. The two officers reportedly fired at a passenger vehicle after the 
driver failed to stop. Authorities charged Mallinga and Wandera with murder, and 
they were in custody pending a court hearing at year's end. 

Excessive force and the indiscriminate use of live ammunition by the SSF, which 
includes the Uganda People's Defense Forces (UPDF), resulted in deaths during 
disarmament operations and cattle recovery in the Karamoja region in the east. For 
example, on May 15, security operatives trying to recover stolen cattle in Katakwi 
District killed a suspected Karamojong cattle rustler. Authorities took no action 
against the security operatives. 

There were no further developments in the following 201 1 arbitrary killings: the 
April killing of a two-year-old girl by reserve police officer Paul Mugenyi and the 
April killing of a 16-year-old girl in Kabale by James Babaranda. The trial hearing 



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of Mugenyi was pending at the military court in Kampala at year's end. Babaranda 
remained in custody pending hearing of his case. 

b. Disappearance 

There were unconfirmed reports of politically motivated disappearances. For 
example, on October 15, the opposition Democratic Party (DP) publicity secretary 
reported that he had received complaints from family members that party activist 
Rogers Segujja had disappeared. Family members suspected security operatives 
might have kidnapped Segujja, whose whereabouts were unknown at year's end. 

Unidentified individuals kidnapped DP activist Annette Namwanga in January 
2011, and the Chieftaincy of Military Intelligence (CMI) acknowledged arresting 
her. In February 201 1 authorities charged her and nine others with terrorism and 
remanded them to prison. On October 19, Namwanga and the nine terrorist 
suspects appeared in court. At year's end they remained free on bail and the case 
was pending trial. 

c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or 
Punishment 

The constitution and law prohibit such practices. On April 26, parliament passed 
the Anti-Torture Bill to criminalize torture, which the president approved in June. 
Any person who commits an act of torture faces up to 15 years imprisonment, a 
fine of 7.2 million shillings ($2,680), or both. The penalty for aggravated torture is 
life imprisonment. There were credible reports the SSF tortured and beat suspects. 

The Uganda Human Rights Commission (UHRC) and international and local 
human rights organizations reported incidents of torture by the SSF, including 
caning, severe beating, and kicking. From January to September, the African 
Center for Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture Victims registered 170 
allegations of torture against police, 214 against the UPDF, one against military 
police, 23 against the Special Investigations Unit (SIU), 361 against unspecified 
security personnel, and 24 against prison officials. 

There were numerous reports of torture and abuse in detention facilities operated 
by the CMI's Joint Antiterrorism Taskforce (J ATT), and the SIU. For example, on 
October 4, security officers in Kampala arrested Moses Tumukunde, driver of 
opposition leader Kizza Besigye, for participating in an unlawful assembly. 



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Tumukunde claimed the police tortured him with beatings before they released him 
without charge on October 10. 

The SSF's use of excessive force resulted in injuries during arrests and other law 
enforcement operations. On February 2, a police officer shot and injured Cissy 
Mukasa, a student at Rainbow College, during a scuffle with residents of Budaka 
District. Authorities took no action against the officer. 

On April 20, the SSF assaulted the leader of the opposition Forum for Democratic 
Change (FDC), Ingrid Turinawe, as the For God and My Country (4GC) activist 
group attempted to organize a public rally in Nansana, a Kampala suburb. 
Turinawe was injured and bedridden for two weeks. Authorities suspended Police 
Constable Irene Arinda, whom her colleagues identified as responsible for the 
assault. On November 6, the government officially apologized to Turinawe for 
police misconduct. A statement released by the prime minister stated Arinda 
would appear before a police disciplinary court on charges of discreditable conduct 
and behaving in a cruel, disgraceful, and indecent manner under the Police Act. 
Hearing of the case was pending at year's end. 

There were no further developments in any of the 201 1 cases involving excessive 
use of force by the SSF and the allegations of abduction and torture leveled against 
the CMI and J ATT by a British national. The British national left the country for 
the United Kingdom, and there were no further reports as to whether he filed a 
petition against the CMI. 

In 2011 the UHRC reported awarding 700 million shillings ($261,000) to victims 
of torture and other abuses. The UHRC reported registering 272 human rights 
complaints against private individuals, 151 UPDF members, 457 police officers, 45 
personnel of other security agencies, 40 prison wardens, and 128 government 
departments and 19 private companies. Of the complaints, 34 percent involved 
allegations of torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment and punishment. 

As was the case in previous years, mobs attacked persons suspected of stealing, 
ritual sacrifice, witchcraft, and other crimes, resulting in deaths. Motivated in part 
by lack of confidence in law enforcement and the judicial system, mobs beat, 
lynched, burned, and otherwise brutalized their victims (see section 6). 

Prison and Detention Center Conditions 



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Prison conditions remained poor and, in some cases, life threatening. Serious 
problems included long periods of pretrial custody, overcrowding, and inadequate 
staff. There were reports the SSF tortured inmates, particularly in military 
facilities and unregistered detention centers. There were isolated reports of forced 
labor (see section 7.b.). 

Physical Conditions : Prisons in Kampala included provisions for medical care, 
running water, and adequate sanitation, ventilation, and lighting; however, 
according to a Bureau of Statistics' 2012 Abstract, Kampala prisons were among 
the most overcrowded. Prison authorities blamed this on the criminal justice 
system, which did not process cases in a timely manner. Prisons outside Kampala 
lacked food, water, medical care, means to transport inmates to court, and bedding, 
while also suffering from inadequate and poorly designed physical infrastructure 
and poor sanitation conditions. In April the media reported an increase in 
communicable diseases among inmates due to congestion and lack of proper 
isolation facilities. 

In a system with an approved capacity of 15,000, at the end of November the 
Uganda Prisons Service (UPS) reported 34,940 prisoners, of whom 33,552 were 
males and 1,388 were females. Severe overcrowding was also a problem at 
juvenile detention facilities and in female wings of prisons. The Kampala Remand 
Home, designed for 45 children, held 148. The Naguru Reception Center, 
designed for 30 children, held 174. 

Although there were separate facilities for female prisoners in central prisons, 
services and facilities for female prisoners in local prisons, including separate cells, 
were lacking in some areas. The UPS had no budget for accommodating pregnant 
women or mothers with infants, and the number of infants in women's prisons 
increased during the year. Due to lack of space in juvenile facilities, the UPS held 
minors in prisons with adults. The UPS separated pretrial detainees in Kampala 
prisons from convicted prisoners. Elsewhere they were held together due to lack 
of space. 

The UPS held 67 political prisoners on treason charges; of these, eight were 
committed for trial in the High Court after they appeared in court, while 59 others 
remained in custody pending case hearings. The political prisoners faced 
conditions similar to those of the general prison population. 



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Prison authorities reported the average pretrial custody period for prisoners 
decreased from 15 months in 201 1 to 11 months for capital offenses and three 
months for minor offenders in 2012. 

The UPS recorded 84 prisoner deaths from January to September from 
overcrowding, malnutrition, poor sanitation, disease, overwork, or lack of medical 
care. 

Administration : Prison authorities reported improvements in recordkeeping by the 
introduction of computers up to the regional level, but inadequacies in record 
keeping persisted. Local nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) reported that 
prisoners and detainees had reasonable access to visitors, and authorities allowed 
them to submit complaints. Prison authorities acknowledged a backlog in the 
investigation of complaints. 

Community service was statutorily available as a sentencing option. Prison 
authorities reported more than 6,200 persons were sentenced to community 
service. 

Authorities gave prisoners the opportunity to pray on days appropriate to their 
faith. The prisons service has an officer of the rank of commissioner who handles, 
investigates, and mediates between management and prisoners. The prison 
ombudsman is responsible for ensuring that when complaints, disputes, or deaths 
occur, they are resolved and verified. Prisoners have five channels through which 
to submit complaints including through their leaders, regular staff meetings, 
prisoner's application book, meetings with top management to raise complaints, 
and via human rights agencies that visit the prisons. 

Monitoring : Information was limited on conditions in unregistered and illegal 
detention facilities, although the SSF allowed the UHRC and some international 
NGOs access to selected unregistered facilities. Observers reported poor 
conditions and numerous cases of abuse in illegal detention facilities or 
unregistered detention facilities, known also as safe houses. 

Authorities allowed international NGOs, including the International Committee of 
the Red Cross (ICRC), foreign diplomats, and local NGOs, to conduct prison visits 
but required advance notification. 



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Improvements : The UPS started a pilot project to provide food to prisoners while 
they attend court in Kampala. Authorities expanded several prisons in the districts 
of Mbarara, Gulu, and Bushenyi to provide adequate accommodation for inmates. 

d. Arbitrary Arrest or Detention 

Although the constitution and law prohibit such practices, the SSF sometimes 
arrested and detained persons arbitrarily, including journalists, demonstrators, and 
opposition leaders (see sections 2.a., 2.b., and 3). 

Role of the Police and Security Apparatus 

The Uganda Police Force (UPF), under the Ministry of Internal Affairs, has 
primary responsibility for law enforcement. The UPDF is charged with external 
security but also had significant responsibility for implementing the disarmament 
campaign in Karamoja, providing election-related security for by-elections that 
were held during the year, and responding to walk-to-freedom protests that 
occurred during September and October. The Internal Security Organization (ISO) 
and External Security Organization (ESO), security agencies and intelligence- 
gathering entities under the Minister of Security, occasionally detained civilians. 
The CMI is legally under the UPDF authority, although it often acted as a 
semiautonomous unit in detaining civilians suspected of rebel and terrorist activity, 
as did the ISO and the ESO. 

The UPF was constrained by limited resources, including low pay and lack of 
vehicles, equipment, and training. The UPF's Professional Standards Unit 
investigated complaints of police abuse, including torture, assault, unlawful arrest 
and detention, mismanagement of case papers, and corrupt practices. The UPF 
was the sole government agency charged with the responsibility of investigating 
charges of impunity. 

According to the September Justice Law and Order Sector Annual Performance 
Report 2011/2012, the UPF received and investigated 4,304 complaints of human 
rights violations by police officers. Of these, 143 involved criminal conduct and 
were referred to the Directorate of Public Prosecutions (DPP), 852 were referred 
for disciplinary action, and 1,003 were dismissed for lack of evidence; there was 
no information on the remaining complaints. The cases referred for disciplinary 
action resulted, among various actions, in the forced retirement of 22 police 
officers, 55 dismissals, 13 demotions in rank, 219 fines, 100 confinements to 
barracks, and 57 severe reprimands. 

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The UPDF continued efforts to transfer responsibility for law enforcement in the 
North and in the Karamoja Region to the UPF. In August authorities reported that 
150 specialized police officers were deployed to the Karamoja subregion to assist 
in effective restoration of law and order. However, the UPDF maintained 
personnel in the subregion for security reasons. 

In conjunction with the UHRC and international organizations, including the ICRC 
and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), the UPDF 
and the UPF continued to train officers on internationally recognized human rights 
standards. During the year 743 police officers attended human rights and 
constitutional workshops. The UPF, the UPDF, and the UPS also used human 
rights manuals in their training programs. 

Arrest Procedures and Treatment While in Detention 

The law requires that judges or prosecutors issue arrest warrants before arrests are 
made. This requirement does not apply to an arrest made during commission of a 
crime or in hot pursuit of a perpetrator. However, authorities often arrested 
suspects without warrants. The law requires authorities charge suspects within 48 
hours of arrest, but they frequently held suspects for longer. Authorities must 
bring to trial or release on bail suspects arrested under the Antiterrorism Law 
within 120 days (360 days if charged with a capital offense); if the case is 
presented to the court before the expiration of this period, there is no limit on 
further pretrial detention. Authorities must inform detainees immediately of the 
reasons for their detention; however, they did not always do so. The law provides 
for bail at the discretion of the judge, and judges generally granted bail, albeit with 
stringent conditions. The law requires detainees to have access to a lawyer, but 
authorities denied many of them their legal right to representation. According to 
the law, the government provides attorneys for indigent defendants charged with 
capital offenses, but funds were rarely available to retain counsel. 

Incommunicado detention remained a problem, particularly with regard to the 
CMI, JATT, and the SIU. Local and international human rights groups reported 
the government detained civilians in military facilities and safe houses, where they 
often held detainees incommunicado and abused them. 

Local and international human rights groups noted authorities neglected the 
Karamoja subregion and that there was a large backlog of human rights cases there 
due to the absence of a tribunal. The OHCHR received several complaints of 

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torture, arbitrary arrest, and detention in military facilities in conjunction with the 
UPDF's response to cattle raids and the government's disarmament campaign there 
(see section La.). 

Arbitrary Arrest : Arbitrary arrests during police sweeps remained a problem, as 
did arbitrary arrests based supposedly on sedition, treason, promoting sectarianism, 
incitement of violence, or terrorism charges. During the year authorities also 
arbitrarily arrested several hundred persons for participating in, or being in 
proximity to, protests organized by opposition parties and civil society (see section 
2.b.). In contrast to previous years, there were no reports the government paid 
compensation to victims of arbitrary arrest. 

On February 22, the SSF arrested 53 persons and detained them for a month at the 
SIU. On March 23, authorities charged the suspects with treason. On September 
27, a court in Kampala freed 18 suspects and committed the remaining 35 for trial 
in the High Court. 

On September 3, authorities arrested the FDC deputy electoral commissioner, 
Michael Kabaziguruka, along with FDC chairman for Ntungamo District John 
Kareebe, former UPDF soldier Frederick Namara, and primary school teacher John 
Rutagorwa, and detained them incommunicado for two weeks. Authorities 
accused the suspects of forming a rebel group known as the Revolution Forces for 
the Liberation of Uganda, charged them with treason, and remanded them to prison 
on September 11. Hearing of the case was pending at year's end. On September 
23, officials from the SIU arrested two relatives of Kabaziguruka at his home in 
Luzira. Security personnel reportedly recovered a submachine gun and other 
military equipment from the residence. 

Pretrial Detention : Case backlogs in the judicial system routinely contributed to 
pretrial detentions of two to three years but sometimes as long as seven years. The 
UPS reported more than half of its approximately 34,940 inmates were pretrial 
detainees. The UHRC heard 1 1 cases brought by prisoners challenging the length 
of their detention. 

Suspects complained of long periods of pretrial custody. The Foundation for 
Human Rights Initiatives, a local NGO, received several complaints. In June 201 1 
military police in Kabowa, a Kampala suburb, arrested Boniface Mumbere and 
detained him at the CMI in Mbuya for 12 days, charging him with the murder of 
Lieutenant Amon Muzoora. However, authorities amended the indictment, 
charged Mumbere and six others with treason, and remanded them to Luzira 



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Prison. One suspect was granted bail; the other detainees were denied bail and 
remained in pretrial custody at the prison. 

Amnesty : Since 2000 the government has offered blanket amnesty to former LRA 
and Allied Democratic Forces rebel combatants to encourage defections. The 
Amnesty Act expired on May 23, effectively ending amnesty. On May 28, the 
government extended part of the act dealing with settling and integrating at least 
26,300 persons who have received amnesty. Officials of the Uganda Amnesty 
Commission reported that of these, the government only integrated approximately 
6,000 and more than half of these were former LRA combatants. During the year 
the government approved 60 amnesty cases. 

In September 201 1 the Constitutional Court ordered the release of LRA Colonel 
Thomas Kwoyelo from prison. Authorities accused Kwoyelo of dozens of 
murders, mutilations, and abductions, and the government claimed his alleged 
crimes made him ineligible for amnesty and refused to release him from prison. 
Kwoyelo remained in custody pending a Supreme Court ruling on his right to 
amnesty. On October 18, Kwoyelo' s lawyer petitioned the African Commission 
on Human and Peoples' Rights seeking a declaration that his continued detention 
was illegal and authorities should release him. A response from the commission 
was pending at year's end. 

e. Denial of Fair Public Trial 

The constitution and law provide for an independent judiciary, and the government 
generally respected this provision. The president appoints Supreme Court, High 
Court, and Court of Appeal judges with the approval of parliament. The president 
also nominates, for the approval of parliament, members of the Judicial Service 
Commission, which makes recommendations on appointments to the judiciary. 
The judiciary ruled against the government in several high-profile cases during the 
year. For example, on January 30, a court in Kampala dismissed the forgery case 
filed by the government against Daily Monitor Managing Editor Dan Kalinaki and 
political analyst reporter Henry Ochieng. 

Lower courts remained understaffed, weak, and inefficient. Judicial corruption 
was a problem (see section 4). 

The military court system often did not assure the right to a fair trial. The law 
establishes a court-martial appeals process. Only senior UPDF leadership can 
grant appeals of sentences, including the death penalty. Under circumstances they 

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deem exigent, military authorities can convene a field court-martial at the scene of 
an alleged crime. The law does not permit appeal of a conviction under a field 
court-martial. Despite a 2006 court ruling prohibiting the military from trying 
civilians in military tribunals, this practice continued. In September 201 1 the 
UPDF announced it would end the practice of trying civilians in military tribunals; 
however, several civilians remained in military custody. 

Trial Procedures 

An inadequate system of judicial administration resulted in a serious backlog of 
cases and impaired the right to a fair trial. There is a presumption of innocence. 
All nonmilitary trials are public but juries are not used. Defendants have the right 
to be present and consult with an attorney in a timely manner. The law requires the 
government to provide an attorney for indigent defendants accused of capital 
offenses, but funds were rarely available to provide counsel. By law defendants 
may confront or question witnesses against them and present witnesses and 
evidence on their own behalf. Authorities sometimes did not respect this right in 
practice. Defendants have the right to obtain documentary evidence the state 
intends to use against them before trial starts. This right of disclosure is not 
absolute in highly sensitive cases. Defendants have the right of appeal and have 
adequate time and facilities to prepare a defense. Sometimes authorities compelled 
suspects to testify or plead guilty. For example, there were unconfirmed reports 
that authorities forced some former LRA rebels (who were abducted into the 
group) to confess to rebelling against the NRM regime in order to receive amnesty. 

Political Prisoners and Detainees 

There were reports of political prisoners during the year, and in addition authorities 
detained several opposition politicians and more than 20 supporters on politically 
motivated grounds for short periods. Authorities released many of these 
individuals without charge, but charged others with crimes such as treason, inciting 
violence, and holding illegal rallies. 

Civil Judicial Procedures and Remedies 

There is an independent and impartial judiciary in civil matters. Victims may 
report cases of human rights violations through the regular court system or the 
UHRC, which has judicial powers under the constitution. These powers include 
the authority to order the release of detainees, payment of compensation to victims, 
and other legal and administrative remedies such as mediation. Victims can appeal 



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their cases to the Court of Appeal and thereafter to the Supreme Court, but not to 
an international regional court. Civil courts and the UHRC have no ability to hold 
perpetrators of human rights abuses criminally liable, and bureaucratic delays 
hampered enforcement of judgments for financial compensation. 

f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence 

The constitution and law prohibit such actions, and the government generally 
respected these prohibitions in practice. However, police did not always obtain 
search warrants, as required by law, to enter private homes and offices. 

The Antiterrorism Act authorizes certain law enforcement officials to intercept 
communications to detect and prevent terrorist activities. The Regulation of 
Interception of Communications Bill authorizes government security agencies to 
tap private conversations as part of efforts to combat terrorism-related offenses. 
The government utilized both statutes to monitor telephone conversations. 

On March 1, the Uganda Communications Commission (UCC), the government 
regulatory body, began the nationwide registration of mobile phone subscriber- 
identity module (SIM) cards to identify individuals committing crimes using 
mobile phones. The UCC reported that 40 percent of mobile owners had registered 
by September 30. On September 21, human rights activists expressed concern 
over the use of a person's data and potential violation of privacy rights and asked 
the government to create a formal structure to register SIM cards. The government 
response was pending at year's end. The government continued to encourage 
university students and government officials to attend NRM political education and 
military science courses known as "chaka mchaka." While the government 
claimed the courses were not compulsory, human rights activists reported the 
government pressured civil servants and students to attend. 

Section 2. Respect for Civil Liberties, Including: 

a. Freedom of Speech and Press 

The constitution and law provide for freedom of speech and press. However, the 
government at times restricted these rights. 

Freedom of Speech : The SSF and government officials occasionally interrogated 
and detained radio presenters and political leaders who made public statements 
critical of the government and used libel laws and national security as grounds to 



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restrict freedom of speech. The police CID summoned several opposition 
legislators for questioning over supposedly inflammatory statements made on radio 
talk shows. For example, on July 13, Mukono Municipality Member of Parliament 
(MP) Betty Nambooze and Central Broadcasting Station (CBS) host Meddie 
Nsereko appeared before the CID regarding an allegedly inflammatory statement 
on CBS against the NRM candidate during the Bukoto South by-election. 
Nambooze and Nsereko provided statements, and police released them without 
charge. 

On September 24, the UCC stopped radio stations from airing a new song by a 
local artist pending investigation into claims it criticized Kampala City Council 
Authority Executive Director Jennifer Musisi. 

Freedom of Press : The independent media were active and expressed a wide 
variety of views. Nevertheless, the government and the SSF imposed some 
restrictions. The UPF's Media Crimes Unit closely monitored all radio, television, 
and print media, and the SSF subjected numerous journalists to harassment, 
intimidation, and arrest. Although there were a number of private rural radio 
stations, government officials and ruling party members owned many of them and 
imposed reporting restrictions. 

Local authorities and the SSF prevented journalists from covering public events 
they considered sensitive, and in some cases arrested and interrogated journalists. 
For example, on February 10, authorities blocked four journalists from covering 
court proceedings presided over by Justice Faith Mwondha in the High Court of 
Entebbe. Authorities briefly arrested two of the journalists, Kigongo Ssebalamu of 
the New Vision Group and Henry Oketch of Radio Simba, when they resisted 
orders to vacate the court premises. On February 14, the Human Rights Network 
for Journalists (HRNJ) petitioned the Judicial Service Commission to investigate 
Justice Mwondha, claiming she was behind the plan to block journalists from her 
court sessions. On April 12, the JCC began an investigation into the allegations; 
findings were pending at year's end. 

On March 4, the Ministry of Health issued a directive that all journalists intending 
to visit nodding disease treatment centers in the north should seek ministry 
permission. On September 18, Kitgum District Chairperson Luka Nyeko expelled 
two journalists, Steven Komakech of Might Fire FM radio and Jimmy Wokorach 
Oboi of the New Vision Group, from a nodding disease review meeting. The 
district chairperson accused the journalists of engaging in partisan politics and 
promoting opposition interests. 



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Several cases of journalists arrested in previous years came to trial. For example, 
on July 3, a court in Kampala granted bail to radio host Augustine Okello, whom 
authorities charged with treason in August 201 1. The trial was pending at year's 
end. 

Authorities interfered with the publication of several books critical of President 
Museveni. For instance, on April 1 1 , police in Kampala arrested Makerere 
University student Doreen Nyanjura and four other activists for publishing a book 
critical of government entitled Is It the Fundamental Change ? Unveiling the 
Hidden Truth. The case was pending at year's end. 

On February 24, police impounded a consignment of 700,000 calendars with 
photographs of political figures and phrases demanding change. On February 28, 
police questioned the publisher of the calendars, Morris Rwakakamba, for four 
hours and released him without charge. Police claimed they impounded the 
calendars as part of an ongoing investigation into incitement of violence. 

Violence and Harassment : The SSF arrested, assaulted, harassed, and intimidated 
journalists, and confiscated and maliciously damaged equipment. In July the 
HRNJ reported 50 journalists were subjected to different forms of violence from 
January to July. The HRNJ noted police continued to lead the list of violators with 
26 cases, followed by the security detail assigned to the president's official 
residence with seven, and the judiciary with five cases. The HRNJ reported 
judicial staff manhandled several journalists and blocked them from covering open 
court proceedings. The UHRC and police continued to investigate the 32 acts of 
SSF violence against journalists reported by the HRNJ in 201 1. 

On March 28, police assaulted journalists Siraje Lubwama of the biweekly 
Observer, Joseph Mutebi of Bukedde, and Hasifah Wanyana of Kingdom FM radio 
as the journalists covered the release on bail of opposition leader Kizza Besigye 
and other opposition politicians, who had been accused of murdering Assistant 
Inspector of Police John Bosco Ariong. On June 18, Lubwama filed a petition in 
the High Court to sue the Kampala Metropolitan traffic police commander, 
Assistant Commissioner Lawrence Niwabiine, and sought compensation for 
damages and inconveniences during the assault. In his complaint, Lubwama 
accused Niwabiine of leading the attack. He claimed police seized and did not 
return a mobile phone handset and 50,000 shillings ($18). The case was pending at 
year's end. 



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On April 29, authorities arrested Daily Monitor journalist Perez Rumanzi, charged 
him with inciting violence, and remanded him to Ntungamo Prison in the western 
region. Authorities arrested him for allegedly "inconveniencing" the security 
detail of First Lady Janet Museveni during a ceremony in Ntungamo District. On 
May 2, a court in Ntungamo released Rumanzi on bail. The case was pending at 
year's end. 

On July 3, the High Court in Kampala granted bail to radio journalist Augustine 
Okello. Authorities charged him with treason in July 201 1, and the case was 
pending trial at year's end. 

There were no developments in the investigation into the December 201 1 death of 
Rwandan journalist Charles Ingabire, who was shot in Kampala. 

Censorship or Content Restrictions : To avoid government intimidation or 
harassment, many print and broadcast journalists practiced self-censorship, 
particularly when reporting on President Museveni, the first family, senior 
members of the ruling NRM party, the SSF, and the exploration and use of oil 
resources. Many rural radio stations claimed unnamed government officials 
ordered them to deny airtime to opposition politicians, and police questioned 
several radio hosts for having opposition members on their shows. The 
government prevented some independent and government-owned television and 
radio stations from hosting opposition political candidates critical of the 
government. 

According to a May report by the HRNJ, some media houses responded to 
perceived pressure from the government and stopped reporting on critical issues 
affecting the country. 

On April 20, police in Kampala summoned Daily Monitor security reporter Risdel 
Kasasira regarding an interview with Mathais Nsubuga, the coordinator of the 
banned 4GC activist group. Police were investigating a case of incitement to 
violence following publication of the interview in the April 8 edition of the Sunday 
Monitor under the headline, "Our Goal is to Bring Museveni Down." Kasasira 
reportedly provided a statement and the police released him without charge. 

On July 9, CBS talk show host Meddie Nsereko Ssebuliba appeared before the 
police media crimes department at the CID for questioning about the content of a 
radio talk show broadcast on June 28. Police accused Ssebuliba of facilitating 



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public criticism of the NRM candidate by the program's panelists. Ssebuliba made 
an official statement and authorities released him without charge. 

On January 30, a court in Kampala dismissed forgery charges against Daily 
Monitor Managing Editor Daniel Kalinaki and Political Editor Henry Ochieng. 
Authorities alleged the journalists had forged sections of a letter from President 
Museveni on the Banyoro-Bafuruki conflicts. The letter, published in the Daily 
Monitor in 2009, included a controversial proposal to prevent members of a 
specific ethnic group from running for elected office in some areas of western 
Uganda. 

Libel Laws/National Security : Authorities used libel laws and cited concerns 
about national security to suppress criticism. According to the HRNJ, seven 
journalists and opposition politicians continued to face sedition charges despite the 
Constitutional Court's 2010 ruling declaring the sedition law unconstitutional. On 
June 6, First Lady Janet Museveni sued the Daily Monitor over a May 12 story 
titled, "Karamoja Leaders Accuse First Family of Land Grabbing," which alleged 
that she was involved in land seizures in Karamoja. The suit claimed the story was 
malicious and defamatory. On September 27, the first lady and the Daily Monitor 
publisher agreed to settle their grievances out of court following an apology by the 
Daily Monitor. 

On March 21, authorities charged CBS journalist Ronald Ssembuusi with criminal 
defamation. Ssembuusi aired a story in November 201 1 alleging former Kalangala 
district chairperson Daniel Kikoola was responsible for the disappearance of 40 
solar panels meant to help circulate clean and safe water in the Kalangala town 
council. Authorities released Ssembuusi on bail, and, at year's end hearing of the 
case was pending a Supreme Court ruling on the law on defamation. 

Internet Freedom 

Individuals and groups could generally engage in the expression of views via the 
Internet, including by e-mail. Unlike in the previous year, there were no reports 
the government attempted to restrict access to the Internet. According to the 
International Telecommunication Union, 1 3 percent of persons in the country used 
the Internet, and 4.5 percent of households had access to the Internet in 2011. 

Academic Freedom and Cultural Events 



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There were government restrictions on academic freedom. For example, research 
clearance was required in certain academic areas, such as history and political 
science, and was difficult to obtain. 

b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association 

Freedom of Assembly 

While the constitution provides for freedoms of assembly and association, the 
government did not respect these rights in practice. The UPF continued to require 
advance notification and approval for public gatherings despite a 2008 
Constitutional Court decision nullifying section 32(2) of the Police Act, which 
requires written police approval for any assembly of 25 persons or more. 

During the year the UPF routinely restricted the right to assemble freely. The UPF 
either gave no official response to critical opposition parties and civil society 
organizations critical of the government that sought UPF authorization for public 
gatherings or instructed them not to assemble. On April 3, relying on section 56 of 
the Penal Code Act, the government outlawed the opposition-linked Activists for 
Change (A4C) group. 

Police often met attempts to assemble by opposition activists, students, and 
workers with excessive and brutal force. For example, on September 18, the SSF 
injured 20 persons while dispersing Muslim youth protesters over a disputed plot 
of land in Iganga municipality. 

Police arrested hundreds of persons for allegedly participating in unlawful 
assembly. For example, on March 21, police arrested 1 1 FDC supporters 
following a violent riot along Kampala Road that led to the death of police officer 
John Bosco Ariong. On March 23, authorities charged 11 suspects with Ariong's 
murder and with participating in an illegal assembly; authorities remanded them to 
Luzira Prison. On May 31, authorities dropped murder charges against 10 of the 
suspects due to lack of evidence, and released them on bail, pending trial on the 
charge of participating in unlawful assembly. Authorities referred the remaining 
suspect, Edison Waako, to High Court for trial for Ariong's murder. On March 28, 
a court charged FDC leader Kizza Besigye and Kampala Mayor Erias Lukwago 
with organizing an illegal assembly. Authorities released Besigye and Lukwago 
on bail, pending hearing of their cases. 



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During the year none of the hundreds of protesters arrested during 201 1 walk-to- 
work events, protests that began against the country's soaring fuel and food prices, 
had been convicted of any offense. 

Freedom of Association 

While the constitution and law provide for freedom of association, the government 
did not always respect this right in practice. The law limits some NGO activity 
and requires NGOs seeking registration to obtain letters of approval from local 
government and community officials. Official registration affords some legal 
protections and enables NGOs to open local bank accounts. The NGO Board, 
which approves NGO registrations, reports to the Ministry of Internal Affairs and 
is composed of representatives from various government ministries, including the 
security services. Discriminatory aspects of the law prevented LGBT 
organizations from registering as NGOs. 

Police blocked meetings of LGBT persons and members of labor unions (see 
sections 6 and 7). 

c. Freedom of Religion 

See the Department of State's International Religious Freedom Report at 
w w w . state, go v/drl/irf/rpt . 

d. Freedom of Movement, Internally Displaced Persons, Protection of 
Refugees, and Stateless Persons 

The constitution and law provide for freedom of internal movement, foreign travel, 
emigration, and repatriation. The government at times limited these rights in 
practice. 

Between May 1 and October 3 1 , police deployed in Kampala to block movement 
of opposition members and activists from participating in the walk-to-work 
protests relaunched during the year by the 4GC activist group. On several 
occasions police confined FDC leader Kizza Besigye at his residence to stop him 
from participating in the protests. 

The government cooperated with the Office of the UN High Commissioner for 
Refugees (UNHCR) and other humanitarian organizations in providing protection 



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and assistance to internally displaced persons, refugees, returning refugees, asylum 
seekers, stateless persons, and other persons of concern. 

Foreign Travel : A married woman must obtain her husband's written permission 
on her passport application in order to list children on her passport. 

Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) 

There were no reported IDPs following the closure of camps in the northern part of 
the country. The government has a policy to avoid establishing IDP camps in the 
landslide- stricken eastern district of Bududa. Instead, in response to landslides or 
other natural disasters, the government encouraged affected populations to move in 
with family or other community members. 

Protection of Refugees 

Access to Asylum : The laws provide for the granting of asylum or refugee status, 
and the government has established a system for providing protection to refugees. 
As of September the UNHCR registered 189,633 refugees and asylum seekers, 
including almost 50,000 new refugees received during the year, most of whom 
came from the DRC. The government provided adequate protection to refugees, 
including temporary protection, resettlement, and other long-term solutions. The 
government made progress in clearing a backlog of asylum requests. 

The UNHCR reported the government was reluctant to grant refugee status to 
Rwandans pending the UNHCR cessation clause scheduled to be implemented in 
June 2013. The cessation clause would require Rwandan refugees who cannot 
prove continuing claims of individual persecution either to return home or apply 
for permanent residency in their country of residence. 

Refugee Abuse : On September 25, a Kampala-based NGO for Congolese refugees 
reported an attack on its office by SSF. Police arrested and later released the 
director of the NGO and an office attendant without charge, pending 
investigations. 

Access to Basic Services : The government granted to refugees, without charge, 
the same access to public health, education, and other services available to citizens. 
There were anecdotal reports of discrimination toward some refugees seeking 
services due to language barriers or xenophobia, but the Office of the Prime 



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Minister's Refugee Commission, the UNHCR, its implementing partners, and 
other NGOs worked to reduce barriers to access. 

Durable Solutions : The government did not accept refugees for resettlement from 
third countries, but it facilitated UNHCR efforts to resettle refugees in third 
countries. The government assisted the safe and voluntary return of refugees to 
their homes. Between January and September, the government assisted the 
UNHCR in the voluntary repatriation of 170 refugees to Rwanda. 

Section 3. Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change Their 
Government 

The constitution and law provide citizens with the right to change their government 
peacefully. The February 201 1 presidential and parliamentary elections marked an 
improvement over previous elections but were nonetheless marred by serious 
irregularities. 

Elections and Political Participation 

Recent Elections : In February 201 1 the country held its fourth (second multiparty) 
presidential and parliamentary election since President Museveni came to power in 
1986. President Museveni won reelection with 68 percent of the vote. Besigye, 
the FDC president, finished second with 26 percent. The ruling NRM party 
captured approximately 75 percent of the seats in the 375-member parliament. 
While the elections and campaign period were generally peaceful, domestic and 
international election observers noted several serious irregularities. These included 
the diversion of government resources for partisan gain, unfair access to the media 
for NRM candidates and lack of access for opposition candidates, the heavy 
deployment of the SSF on election day, government intimidation, disorganized 
polling stations, and the absence of many voters' names from voter rolls. 

Political Parties : There were approximately 38 registered parties. The ruling 
NRM party operated without restriction, regularly holding rallies and conducting 
political activities. Authorities occasionally restricted the activities of the main 
opposition parties by refusing them permission to hold public demonstrations and 
preventing opposition leaders from appearing on local radio stations. Police fired 
tear gas to disperse rallies of opposition leaders. For example, on May 21, police 
fired tear gas to disperse a crowd that had gathered to hear opposition leader 
Besigye and Kampala Mayor Lukwago at Nakasero Market in Kampala. There 
were no reports of injuries. 



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Police arbitrarily arrested several FDC opposition leaders during the year. For 
instance, on April 16, police arrested six supporters of the FDC and charged them 
with disobeying lawful orders. Authorities released the suspects on police bond, 
and the case was pending at year's end. On October 15, police in Nakasongola 
arrested six FDC supporters; they were granted bail on October 22 after being 
charged with holding an unlawful assembly. On November 20, police arrested 
another FDC official, Simon Rutarondwa, over allegations of links to a new rebel 
group fighting to overthrow the ruling NRM government. He was in detention at 
the SIU in Kireka, Kampala at year's end. 

On September 25, police arrested and later released opposition MP for Kyadondo 
East, Ibrahim Nganda Ssemujju, and charged him with illegal assembly. Ssemujju 
reportedly held a rally at Kireka Park, a suburb of Kampala, in defiance of police 
orders. The case was pending at year's end. 

Participation of Women and Minorities : There were 23 female ministers in the 
president's 75-member cabinet. The speaker of parliament, the deputy chief justice 
of the Supreme Court, and the inspector of government (IGG), who heads the 
leading government anticorruption investigative body, were women. There were 
135 women in the 386-member parliament. The law requires elections for 
parliamentary seats reserved for special-interest groups: 1 12 for women, five for 
organized labor, five for persons with disabilities, five for youth, and 10 for the 
UPDF. An opaque "electoral college" process organized by a single government- 
supported NGO selected the five persons with disabilities. There was no minority 
representation in the parliament. 

Section 4. Corruption and Lack of Transparency in Government 

The law provides criminal penalties for official corruption. However, the 
government did not implement the law effectively, and officials frequently 
engaged in corrupt practices with impunity. The World Bank's most recent 
Worldwide Governance Indicators reflected corruption was a severe problem. 
According to the World Bank, the country annually loses 768.9 billion shillings 
($286 million) to corruption. 

The government selectively enforced financial disclosure laws, under which an 
estimated 27,000 public officials were subject to biannual reporting requirements. 
The requirements apply to spouses and dependent children as well. Public officers 
are required to disclose their income and assets upon assuming and leaving office. 



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The IGG is responsible for monitoring compliance. Penalties for noncompliance 
include a warning or caution; demotion; dismissal, and/or administrative leave 
from office. For example, authorities dismissed MP Ken Lukyamuzi for 
noncompliance. According to the IGG, 7,051 officials reported in the 201 1-12 
cycle. Although Section 7 of the Leadership Code Act 2002 requires public 
disclosure, authorities did not make these reports public. 

Government agencies responsible for combating corruption include the IGG, DPP, 
Anticorruption Division (ACD) of the High Court, parliamentary Public Accounts 
Committee, police Criminal Investigation Division, Office of the Auditor General, 
and Directorate for Ethics and Integrity. There was weak political will to combat 
corruption at the highest levels of government, and many corruption cases 
remained pending for years. The ACD has two judges and three magistrates. 
Since its 2009 inception, the ACD has heard more than 800 corruption cases, 
several of which involved senior level officials. 

On July 25, police arrested officials from the Office of the Prime Minister, 
including Commissioner for Relief, Disaster Preparedness and Management John 
Martin Owor and former principal accounting officer Geoffrey Kazinda, along 
with three junior officers. Authorities charged them with embezzling 316.8 million 
shillings ($1 18,020). Authorities released Kazinda and the other accused on bail 
with a hearing pending at year's end. 

On September 19, authorities indicted several senior-level officials pending police 
investigations into corruption. Those charged included Jimmy Lwamafa, 
permanent secretary for the Ministry of Public Service; Kiwanuka Kunsa, 
commissioner of pensions; principal accountant Christopher Obeyi; head of 
information technology Francis Lubega; and Peter Ssajabi, national secretary, East 
African Community Beneficiary Association. The case involved a fraudulent 
distribution of funds in which 63 billion shillings ($24 million) was paid to more 
than 1,000 nonexistent pensioners in 201 1. 

On September 25, the Magistrates Court passed on to the High Court for trial the 
case of Foreign Minister Sam Kutesa, Minister for General Duties John Nasasira, 
and State Minister for Labor Rukutana Mwesigwa. Authorities charged the 
ministers with abuse of office and causing financial loss of 14 billion shillings 
($5.2 million) in October 201 1. The trial began on October 22, and on November 
9, the court acquitted and discharged the ministers for lack of evidence. 



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According to Transparency International, the police and judiciary were the 
institutions most prone to corruption. Police arrested several officers implicated in 
bribery and corruption. Authorities arrested several magistrates and judicial 
officials for forgery, soliciting, and receiving bribes. 

The law provides for public access to government information, but the government 
rarely provided such access. In June 201 1 the government passed the Access to 
Information Act, which allows individuals to petition any government department 
to access information. However, the Secrecy Act bars public servants from 
revealing information. The law provides that a person shall disclose information 
within three months of becoming an elected official or assuming public office and 
thereafter in December every two years. 

Section 5. Governmental Attitude Regarding International and 
Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human Rights 

Domestic and international human rights groups generally operated without 
government restriction, investigating and publishing their findings on human rights 
cases. Local LGBT-related NGOs were denied official status due to the 
discriminatory law preventing their registration. 

An August 21 Human Rights Watch report asserted the government restricted 
NGOs. The report concluded many NGOs deliberately avoid engaging in political 
issues to avoid negative government scrutiny. 

On April 14, the minister of internal affairs summoned the Uganda Land Alliance 
(ULA) for questioning. The investigation of the ULA followed a September 201 1 
global report, written in collaboration with Oxfam International, that alleged 
foreigners and multinational corporations had displaced 20,000 persons in various 
districts. 

On June 14, the NGO Board, the government body responsible for overseeing the 
operations of NGOs, ordered the local NGO, Advocates Coalition for 
Development, to cease involvement in political activities. 

On July 27, the government announced an NGO policy to guide and regulate the 
operations of civil society organizations. Among other elements, the policy 
officially defines an NGO and provides an implementation framework with clearly 
articulated roles and responsibilities for both state and nonstate actors. 



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The government was generally responsive to some of the concerns of local and 
international human rights organizations. 

UN and Other International Bodies : The government cooperated with international 
governmental organizations and permitted visits by the UN, the OHCHR, the 
ICRC, and other international organizations. 

Government Human Rights Bodies : The UHRC is a constitutionally mandated 
institution with quasi-judicial powers to investigate allegations of human rights 
abuses and award compensation to abuse victims. Although the UHRC operates 
independently, the president appoints its seven-member board. Under the law the 
UHRC may subpoena information, direct the release of detainees, and order the 
payment of compensation for abuses. The UHRC pursued suspected human rights 
abusers, including in the military and police forces, and had branches countrywide. 
Its resources, however, were inadequate to investigate all complaints received. 

In its June 201 1 annual report, the UHRC reported registering 1,231 human rights 
complaints against 1,182 individuals, including 151 UPDF members, 457 police 
officers, 46 members of other security agencies, 40 prison wardens, 272 private 
citizens. Of the 1,231 complaints, 34.8 percent involved allegations of torture or 
cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment and punishment. The report urged the 
government to pass pending antitorture legislation (which was subsequently passed 
in April 2012); improve prison conditions, particularly for women and children; 
eliminate illegal detention and prolonged pretrial detention practices; and provide 
SSF with increased human rights training. 

Section 6. Discrimination, Societal Abuses, and Trafficking in Persons 

The law prohibits discrimination based on race, gender, disability, language, or 
social status but is silent on sexual orientation and gender identity. The penal 
code, however, prohibits "unnatural offenses." The government did not enforce 
the law in matters of locally or culturally prevalent discrimination against women, 
children, persons with disabilities, or certain ethnic groups. 

Women 

Rape and Domestic Violence : The law criminalizes rape, including spousal rape. 
Rape remained a serious problem throughout the country, and the government did 
not consistently enforce the law. Although the government arrested, prosecuted, 
and convicted persons for rape, the crime was seriously underreported, and 



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authorities did not investigate most cases. Police lacked the criminal forensic 
capacity to collect evidence, which hampered prosecution and conviction. The 
201 1 police crime report registered 520 rape cases throughout the country, of 
which 269 were tried. 

The law criminalizes domestic violence and provides penalties for abusers ranging 
from fines to two year's imprisonment. However, women's activists were 
concerned the law was not enforced. Although the 201 1 UPF annual crime report 
listed 181 reported cases of domestic violence, up 14 percent from 2010's 159 
cases, these statistics substantially underestimated the extent of the problem. 
Domestic violence against women remained widespread. A July 19 Center for 
Basic Research report indicated 70 percent of women interviewed from eastern and 
northern regions had been beaten by their husbands. In addition the findings 
indicated 17 percent of the same women had been raped, 23 percent forced into 
marriage, 1 percent denied inheritance rights, and 10 percent denied political 
rights. 

Many law enforcement officials viewed wife beating as a husband's prerogative, as 
did the majority of the population, and police rarely intervened in cases of 
domestic violence. Between January and September, the government arrested six 
persons for domestic violence offenses. For example, on May 4, the Iganga High 
Court convicted Ahmed Gangira for the murder of his wife, Hawa Nakiranda, and 
sentenced him to 20 years in prison. 

On March 1 1, a court in Jinja dismissed murder charges against Captain Charles 
Ogwal for lack of evidence. Authorities accused Captain Ogwal of killing his 
wife, Jane Asimo, following a family argument. 

Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting (FGM/C) : The law and constitution prohibit 
FGM/C and establish a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. Neither culture, 
religion, nor the consent of the victim is an allowable defense. The government, 
women's groups, and international organizations continued to combat the practice 
through education. These programs, which received some support from local 
leaders, emphasized close cooperation with traditional authority figures and peer 
counseling. Nevertheless, the Sabiny ethnic group in rural Kapchorwa District and 
the Pokot ethnic group along the northeastern border with Kenya continued to 
practice FGM/C. (See also section 6, Children.) 



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In December the Reproductive Education and Community Health program, a local 
NGO that monitors the prevalence of FGM/C, received reports of 1 18 women who 
were victims of the practice. 

On December 24, police in Bukwo District arrested Danis Kokop, Kissa Kokop, 
and Rholah Kokop, who were found conducting FGM/C on 20 women in Bukwo 
District. The case was pending hearing at year's end. 

Sexual Harassment : The law criminalizes sexual harassment with penalties of up 
to 14 years of imprisonment, but authorities did not effectively enforce it. Sexual 
harassment was a serious and widespread problem in schools, universities, and 
workplaces. 

Authorities from Makerere and Kyambogo universities continued to investigate 
reports of the sexual harassment of students by some lecturers from November 
201 1 and investigations were pending at year's end. 

Reproductive Rights : There are no laws restricting couples or individuals from 
deciding the number, spacing, and timing of their children. There are no laws 
restricting access to reproductive information or otherwise limiting such access via 
discrimination, coercion, and violence. However, family planning information and 
assistance were difficult to obtain, particularly in rural areas, where there were few 
health clinics. According to the UN Population Fund, 18 percent of women ages 
15-49 used a modern method of contraception. By the end of September Ministry 
of Health officials recorded 435 maternal mortality deaths per 100,000 live births. 
Skilled health personnel attended 42 percent of births. Health officials attribute the 
high maternal mortality rate to medical complications based on excessive bleeding 
after birth, obstructed labor, high blood pressure, malaria, a shortage of staff to 
attend to mothers, and delivery outside of health facilities. 

Discrimination : The law invests women with the same legal status and rights as 
men. However, discrimination against women continued to be widespread, 
especially in rural areas. Many customary laws discriminate against women in 
adoption, marriage, divorce, and inheritance. Under local customary law in many 
areas, women cannot own or inherit property or retain custody of their children. 
Traditional divorce law in many areas requires women to meet stricter evidentiary 
standards than men to prove adultery. Polygyny is legal under both customary and 
Islamic law, and in some ethnic groups men can "inherit" the widows of their 
deceased brothers. Women also experienced economic discrimination. For 
example, a June 2010 study conducted by local NGO Actionaid found that women, 



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who did most of the agricultural work, owned only 7 percent of the agricultural 
land. Women also experienced economic discrimination in access to employment, 
credit, income, business ownership, and senior or managerial positions. 

Eliminating gender inequality remained a high priority for the government, which, 
in conjunction with NGOs and women's rights groups, sponsored workshops and 
training sessions throughout the country to increase awareness of women's rights. 

During the year Actionaid sponsored several workshops on women's rights in 
various districts including Amuru, Lira, Nebbi, Pallisa, Mubende, Kumi, Katakwi, 
Kween, and Kampala. 

Children 

Birth Registration : The law accords citizenship to children born in or outside the 
country if at least one parent or one grandparent held Ugandan citizenship at the 
time of the child's birth. Children under the age of 18 who are abandoned in the 
country with no known parents are considered Ugandan citizens, as are children 
under the age of 18 adopted by Ugandan parents. 

The law requires citizens to register a birth within three months. According to the 
201 1 Uganda Demographic and Health Survey only 29 percent of rural and 38 
percent of urban births were registered. Citizens who cannot afford the birth 
registration fees do not participate in the registration process, but are not denied 
citizenship. 

In general, lack of registration did not result in denial of public services. However, 
many primary schools, especially in urban centers, required birth certificates for 
enrollment. Enrollment in university and other tertiary institutions also required 
birth certificates. In September 201 1 the Uganda Registration Services Bureau 
(URSB), the government agency responsible for recording births and deaths, 
launched a computerized system that uses mobile telephones to deliver timely and 
accurate records. The system enables officials to send details of births and deaths 
as a text message to the central server at URSB headquarters in Kampala. 

Education : The law provides for tuition-free and compulsory education for the 
first seven years of primary school or through high school for especially 
underprivileged students. Students, except for the most underprivileged, must pay 
for school supplies and some school operating costs. Many parents could not 
afford these expenses. 

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Child Abuse : Child abuse remained a serious problem, particularly rape and 
sexual abuse of girls, and recorded cases greatly understated the pervasiveness of 
abuse. 

According to the 201 1 annual police crime report, defilement (akin to statutory 
rape) remained the most common crime committed against children, with 7,690 
cases recorded. The report also registered 520 cases of rape, 69 of child 
trafficking, eight of child sacrifice, 8,075 of child neglect, 1,973 of child desertion, 
1,775 of child abuse and torture, 125 of kidnapping, 66 of infanticide, and 423 of 
other sexual-related offenses, including assault and incest. The government 
worked with UNICEF and NGOs, including Save the Children and African 
Network for the Prevention and Protection against Child Abuse and Neglect 
(ANPPCAN), to combat child abuse. 

On August 31, the government newspaper Saturday Vision reported corporal 
punishment was pervasive in primary schools in the greater Kampala area, despite 
a government directive prohibiting the practice. According to the report, in 
approximately 98 percent of the 30 schools surveyed in greater Kampala, pupils 
were caned for offences ranging from giving wrong answers to speaking in their 
vernacular language instead of English. 

There were numerous reports of ritual sacrifice of children during the year. The 
government took some steps to address this problem. For example, on July 13, the 
High Court in Kampala convicted Joyce Jane Kiggundu and sentenced her to 14 
years' imprisonment for kidnapping a 10-year-old boy to perform a ritual sacrifice 
in January 2011. 

There were developments in previous ritual murder cases. For example, on July 
26, the High Court in Masaka sentenced Godfrey Kajubi to life imprisonment for 
the ritual murder of a 12-year-old boy in 2008. However, Kajubi appealed the 
verdict, which was pending a hearing at year's end. 

Perpetrators of sexual abuse often were family members, neighbors, or teachers. In 
2009 the UPF began providing free rape and defilement medical examinations 
throughout the country to assist investigations. An estimated 10,050 victims of 
rape and defilement have since received free medical examinations at Mulago 
Hospital in Kampala. 



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Child Marriage : The legal minimum age for marriage is 18, but authorities did not 
actively enforce the law. Marriage of underage girls by parental arrangement was 
common, particularly in rural areas. Local NGOs and the Police Family and 
Children Unit reported that acute poverty forced some parents to give away their 
children, including girls as young as age 12, for early marriage and sexual 
arrangements. 

On December 8, police in Mbarara District arrested 16 family members who 
allegedly forced a 13-year-old girl to get married. Investigations and a hearing of 
the case were pending at year's end. 

According to UNICEF, 12 percent of women 20 to 24 years old were married or in 
a union before they were 15 years old, and 46 percent were married or in a union 
before reaching age 18. 

According to a November 201 1 survey conducted by an international women's 
organization in Kasese District, girls entered marriage as early as age 12. The 
report stated that in Bukonzo East, 22 percent of marriages involved girls between 
the ages of 12 and 14, and 78 percent of marriages involved girls between 15 and 
17 years of age. In Busongora North, 19 percent of marriages involved girls 
between 12 and 14, and 81 percent of marriages involved girls between 15 and 17 
years of age. Reportedly, Kasese was the district with the highest number of early 
marriages. 

The law considers sexual contact outside marriage with girls less than 18 years of 
age, regardless of consent or age of the perpetrator, as "defilement" and carries a 
maximum penalty of death. Such cases often were settled by a payment to the 
girl's parents. 

Harmful Traditional Practices : The law and constitution prohibit FGM/C and other 
related activities and establish a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. A local 
NGO that monitors the prevalence of FGM/C reported that 30 girls were subjected 
to FGM/C in September in Nakapiripirit District. There were no reports of FGM/C 
on girls in the districts of Kapchorwa, Bukwo, Kween, or Amudat. 

The June 201 1 case against Kam-Kosike Lonete for her involvement in FGM/C 
practices was pending hearing at year's end. 

Sexual Exploitation of Children : Commercial sexual exploitation of children was a 
problem. According to a February study conducted by the local NGO African 



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Network for the Prevention and Protection against Child Abuse and Neglect, 
extensive commercial sex exploitation of girls between ages 15 and 19 occurred in 
Kampala District. 

While the law prohibits sexual exploitation of children, the government did not 
enforce the law effectively. The minimum age of consensual sex is 18 years. The 
law prohibits child pornography. On March 12, police arrested Emin Baro, a 
Turkish citizen, on charges of molesting underage girls and possessing child 
pornography. On March 27, a court convicted Baro of sexually molesting 
underage girls and fined him 7.2 million shillings ($2,680). Activists and 
government agencies condemned the ruling as too lenient, which prompted police 
to rearrest Baro on March 29. On October 16, Baro appeared in court on charges 
of aggravated defilement and authorities remanded him to prison; the case was 
pending at year's end. 

Child Soldiers : Although LRA members who were abducted as children continued 
to leave the LRA and return home, an estimated 250 to 400 LRA fighters 
remained. Despite a significant reduction in LRA size since 2008, the LRA 
continued to hold women and children against their will, although increasingly the 
group abducted children from neighboring countries. The government led regional 
efforts to counter the influence of the LRA in coordination with South Sudan, the 
CAR, and the DRC. 

Infanticide or Infanticide of Children with Disabilities : According to the 201 1 
annual police crime report, there were 66 reported infanticides that year. 

Displaced Children : Families from the farming regions of Karamoja sent many 
children to Kampala during the dry season to find food and work, and most of 
them ended up begging on the streets. Police routinely rounded up street children 
and relocated them to a custodial home for juvenile delinquents where staff 
attempted to locate the children's families and return them to their homes. During 
the year authorities rounded up 52 street children and took them to Kampiringisa 
National Rehabilitation Centre in Mpigi. The center, understaffed and 
underfunded, was often unable to accommodate the influx of children from these 
roundups, and many of them eventually returned to the Kampala streets. 

Institutionalized Children : There were reports of abuses in several orphanage 
centers. Of the 412 orphanages operating in the country, only 34 were formally 
registered. The government lacked the ability to manage registration and 
monitoring of orphanages. 



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On April 13, authorities in Rukungiri District closed Rubirizi Child Development 
Center following a petition by residents alleging one of the administrators had been 
sexually abusing some of the children. Police arrested the administrator and an 
investigation was pending at year's end. 

International Child Abductions : The country is not a party to the 1980 Hague 
Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction. 

Anti-Semitism 

The Jewish community was small, and there were no reports of anti-Semitic acts. 
Trafficking in Persons 

See the Department of State's Trafficking in Persons Report at 
www.state.gov/j/tip/ . 

Persons with Disabilities 

The law prohibits discrimination against persons with physical, sensory, 
intellectual, or mental disabilities in employment, education, air travel and other 
transportation, access to health care, and the provision of other state services. 
However, the government did not enforce the law effectively, and persons with 
disabilities faced societal discrimination and limited job and educational 
opportunities. 

On April 1, the government launched a new program on special needs and 
inclusive education to enhance education of children with disabilities. With the 
exception of nine Kampala-based television stations, stations did not comply with 
the June 30 UCC deadline to carry sign language interpretation for all 
programming. The government took no action against these stations. The UHRC 
also received complaints of discrimination in employment and access to transport 
and other public services. Most schools in the country did not accommodate 
persons with disabilities. 

A July report released by the National Council on Disability (NCD) indicated 55 
percent of persons with disabilities lacked functional literacy skills, and only 33 
percent studied to primary grade seven. The report found some children with 
mental disabilities were sometimes denied food and were tied to trees and beds 



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with ropes in order to control their movements. The report further stated the needs 
of children with autism and learning difficulties were ignored due to an insufficient 
number of special needs schools. 

While the law requires access to special facilities for children with disabilities, a 
September 201 1 survey conducted by the NCD indicated 80 percent of hospitals 
and health centers lacked access ramps. 

The law reserves five seats in parliament for representatives of persons with 
disabilities. However, the NCD reported participation by persons with disabilities 
in elections was minimal as they could not access polling centers because of 
physical barriers; election materials did not accommodate persons with visual 
impairments; and polling stations lacked support services such as guides, helpers, 
and sign language interpreters. The NCD also noted the civic education offered by 
the government to citizens was inaccessible to many persons with disabilities since 
it was done through electronic and print media. 

Government agencies responsible for protecting the rights of persons with 
disabilities included the Ministry of State for Disabled Persons, the NCD, and the 
Ministry of Gender, Labor, and Social Development, but these entities lacked 
sufficient funding to undertake any significant initiatives. 

National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities 

There were isolated reports of violence between ethnic minorities in some parts of 
the country. For example, on January 12, tribal clashes between the Bagisu and 
Sabiny over disputed land left two persons dead, approximately 14 houses burned, 
and at least 200 persons displaced. 

Indigenous People 

The government displaced the Batwa ethnic tribe, with an estimated 6,700 
members, in 1992 when it created Mgahinga National Park, Bwindi Impenetrable 
National Park, and Echuya Central Forest Reserve. This displacement 
compounded challenges faced by the Batwa, including limited access to education, 
health care, land, and economic opportunities. 

Societal Abuses, Discrimination, and Acts of Violence Based on Sexual 
Orientation and Gender Identity 



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LGBT persons faced discrimination and legal restrictions. Consensual same-sex 
sexual conduct is illegal according to a law from the colonial era that criminalizes 
"carnal knowledge of any person against the order of nature" and provides a 
penalty up to life imprisonment. While authorities did not convict any persons 
under the law, the government arrested persons for related offenses. 

On April 3, a court in Iganga District remanded Richard Nyeusi Mulwo, deputy 
head teacher of Bulumwaki Primary School, for trial in the High Court for 
engaging in homosexual activities. At year's end the trial was pending. 

On September 13, police in Kampala arrested British theatre producer David 
Edwards Cecil for staging a play police alleged promoted homosexual activity. 
The play was reportedly performed in several venues around Kampala in August, 
despite an injunction by the Media Council, the government media regulatory 
body. On September 17, a court charged Cecil with violating lawful orders issued 
under section 1 17 of the penal code and for staging a play while it was under 
review by the Media Council. Cecil was released on bail, and his case was 
pending at year's end. 

LGBT persons were subject to societal harassment, discrimination, intimidation, 
and threats to their well-being, and were denied access to health services. 
Discriminatory practices also prevented local LBGT NGOs from registering with 
the NGO Board and obtaining official status (see section 2.b.). 

On March 15, four LGBT activists filed a petition in the High Court accusing the 
minister of ethics and integrity and the attorney general of illegally closing a 
workshop organized by Freedom and Roam Uganda in Entebbe on February 14. 
Hearing of the case was pending at year's end. 

The government blocked meetings organized by LGBT groups. For example, on 
June 18, police closed a skills-building workshop for LGBT human rights 
defenders organized by the East and Horn of African Human Rights Defenders 
Project (EHAHRDP) in Kampala. Police detained workshop participants, guests, 
and hotel staff for more than three hours. Two EHAHRDP staff and two workshop 
participants also were briefly detained but later released. 

On October 1, a local news station broadcast a video of a transgender individual 
being harassed and humiliated at a local police station in Kisenye District. The 
video showed police officers aggressively touching, taunting, and forcibly 
undressing the individual, whom the police subsequently paraded before a crowd 



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of onlookers. Authorities did not file charges against the police officers; they 
released the transgender individual without charge. 

There were no developments regarding the Constitutional Court's deliberations on 
a petition filed in 2009 challenging the constitutionality of a law that prevents the 
Equal Opportunities Commission from investigating "any matter involving 
behavior which is considered to be (i) immoral and socially harmful or (ii) 
unacceptable by the majority of the cultural and social communities in Uganda." 

Other Societal Violence or Discrimination 

Discrimination against persons with HIV/ AIDS was common and prevented such 
persons from obtaining treatment and support. International and local NGOs, in 
cooperation with the government, sponsored public awareness campaigns to 
eliminate the stigma of HIV/ AIDS. Counselors encouraged patients to be tested 
with their partners and family so that they all received information about 
HIV/ AIDS. Persons with HIV/ AIDS formed support groups to promote awareness 
in their communities. During the year, in line with the National HIV/ AIDS policy 
launched in 2011, several government departments launched HIV/ AIDS workplace 
policies to protect and maintain employee health and well-being at work. For 
example, on May 15, the Ministry of East African Affairs announced an 
HIV/ AIDS workplace policy to promote freedom from stigma and 
nondiscrimination for all employees. With resources from the ministry budget and 
support from the Uganda AIDS Commission, the policy provides drugs, promotes 
gender equity and equality, and disease management for HIV-positive employees. 
In October the ministry inaugurated a committee to implement the policy and train 
staff counselors. 

NGOs reported many HIV-positive inmates in prison did not have adequate access 
to antiretroviral medication, especially in rural areas, and prison officials 
sometimes subjected HIV-positive inmates to hard labor (see section 7). 

Mob violence was a problem. Mobs attacked persons suspected of stealing, ritual 
sacrifice, witchcraft, and other crimes, resulting in deaths. 

For example, on April 30, a mob in Buvuma District stoned to death a Buvuma 
police station crime preventer, a person recruited and given basic training to assist 
the police in community policing, over allegations of practicing witchcraft. 
Authorities arrested several mob members. 



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On July 13, police in Luwero District arrested 10 persons in connection with the 
alleged vigilante killing of a suspected thief. The incident occurred on July 12, and 
investigations in the case were pending at year's end. 

Section 7. Worker Rights 

a. Freedom of Association and the Right to Collective Bargaining 

The law allows workers, except for "essential" government employees, which 
includes police, army, and management-level officials, to form and join 
independent unions. All unions must be registered either under the National 
Organization of Trade Unions (NOTU), or the Confederation of Trade Unions. 
The law allows unions to conduct activities without interference, prohibits 
antiunion discrimination by an employer, and provides for reinstatement of 
workers dismissed for union activity, the right to strike, freedom of association, 
and the right to bargain collectively. The government did not always protect these 
rights. NOTU officials reported some employers used a "recognition agreement" 
to allow union operations at the work place. Labor activists reported government 
oversight of labor practices was poor and that the Ministry of Gender, Labor, and 
Social Development was underfunded and understaffed. Labor inspectors were 
present in only 44 of the 112 districts. Most employers did not give employees 
written contracts of employment, resulting in lack of job security and union 
representation. 

Worker organizations were independent of the government and political parties. 
However, four members of the ruling NRM party and one independent held the 
five seats set aside in parliament for workers. There were instances of government 
interference in union activity. For example, on January 30, police in Kampala 
blocked a meeting organized to discuss teachers' demands for salary increases and 
improved working conditions. 

As of September 30, local media reported 1 1 strikes over low salaries, wages, and 
poor working conditions. Police occasionally arrested persons engaged in 
demonstrations and strikes or used excessive force to disrupt striking workers. For 
instance, on May 1, police in Kampala arrested and later released without charge 
21 workers' activists who were demonstrating against the government's failure to 
address workers' rights. 

Antiunion discrimination occurred in practice, and labor activists accused several 
companies of preventing employees from joining unions by denying promotions, 



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not renewing work contracts, and sometimes refusing to recognize unions. For 
example, NOTU officials cited numerous companies that resisted trade unions, 
including telecommunications company MTN Uganda, Posta Uganda, and all 
Chinese and Asian-managed firms. Labor activists reported workers continued to 
lose their jobs because of joining unions in other sectors. NOTU officials in 
particular cited MTN Uganda, which threatened to exclude workers who joined 
unions from the company's pension fund. 

Public service unions, including medical staff and teachers, were able to negotiate 
their salaries and employment terms through their unions. However, the 
government fixed salaries for "essential government employees," including police, 
military, and management-level officials. On August 14, the government 
inaugurated the National Negotiation and Consultation Council, a key step in the 
push for negotiating space on the salary and welfare of government workers. 
Labor activists reported some employers ignored the legal requirement to enter into 
Collective Bargaining Agreements (CBA) with registered unions. Labor activists 
also reported some employers resorted to subcontracting and outsourcing services 
or hired workers temporarily in order to avoid CBAs. According to NOTU, seven 
CBAs were signed during the year. 

b. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor 

The law prohibits forced or compulsory labor, including by children, but does not 
expressly prohibit prison labor. The law states such labor becomes forced only if 
the worker is "hired out to or placed at the disposal of a private individual, 
company, or association." The government did not always enforce the law, and 
there were reports forced labor practices occurred, particularly in prisons (see 
section I.e.). Prison officials allegedly hired out prisoners to work on private 
farms and construction sites, where prisoners were often overworked. Male 
prisoners performed arduous physical labor, while female prisoners produced 
marketable handicrafts such as woven basketry. Compensation, when paid, 
generally was very low. Prisoners did not have savings accounts, but prison 
accounting staff recorded wages owed in a book, and prisoners had access to these 
funds. 

Forced child labor also occurred (see section I.e.). 

Also see the Department of State's Trafficking in Persons Report at 
www.state.gov/j/tip . 



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c. Prohibition of Child Labor and Minimum Age for Employment 

The law prohibits employers from hiring workers below the age of 18. The law 
prohibits children under the age of 12 from being employed in any business or 
workplace, and all children are prohibited from being employed during school 
hours. However, by contrast, regulations of the Ministry of Gender, Labor, and 
Social Development permit the employment of children between the ages of 14 
and 18. Furthermore, the law allows 13-year-olds to engage in "light work," 
provided it does not interfere with their education. The law prohibits children from 
working from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. and does not allow children to be employed in work 
that is "injurious to their health, dangerous or hazardous or otherwise unsuitable." 
In addition, the law provides for inspection of workplaces, identification of hazards 
at the workplace, and other related matters for all workers, including children. 
According to ANPPCAN, children between the ages of five and 18 were 
employed. 

Institutions responsible for enforcing child labor laws and policies include the 
National Council of Children; the police force's Child and Family Protection Unit; 
the Industrial Court; and the Ministry of Gender, Labor, and Social Development. 
Financial constraints limited efforts. For instance, the Industrial Court lacked 
judges, so the High Court or the Magistrates' Court handled labor disputes. The 
Ministry of Gender, Labor, and Social Development provided social services to 
children working in the worst forms of child labor and other vulnerable groups and 
conducted training for staff, local leaders, and district labor inspectors. Sixty of its 
district labor officers were responsible for reporting on child labor issues. 
However, due to lack of funds and logistical support, district labor officials 
conducted no child labor inspections since 2004. During the year officials from 
the Ministry of Gender, Labor, and Social Development's Occupational, Safety 
and Health Department conducted 10 labor inspections with a child labor 
component in various districts. The government coordinated its efforts to stop 
child labor through the National Steering Committee on Child Labor, which 
included representatives of the Ministry of Gender, Labor, and Social 
Development, Ministry of Education and Sports, Ministry of Local Government, 
Federation of Uganda Employers, NOTU, NGOs, journalists, and academics. The 
steering committee last met in June. 

The government cooperated with the International Labor Organization (ILO), 
foreign governments, and NGOs on several initiatives to combat child labor, 
including the education and reintegration of child laborers into their communities. 
On June 26, the government initiated the National Action Plan for the elimination 



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of the worst forms of child labor. The plan was the first stage to mobilize policy 
makers and the public to act and intensify awareness of the risks and consequences 
of child labor. Several human rights NGOs continued programs to remove 
children from hazardous work situations. 

Nevertheless, child labor was common, especially in the informal sector. 
Exploitive and forced child labor predominantly occurred in rural areas in cattle 
herding; transport, mining; street vending, or begging; scrap collecting; stone 
quarrying; brick making; road construction and repair; car washing; fishing; 
domestic nanny and housekeeper services; bar or club service work; border 
smuggling; and in commercial farming including the production of tea, coffee, 
sugarcane, vanilla, tobacco, rice, cotton, charcoal, and palm oil. In urban areas 
children sold small items on the street, worked in shops, begged for money, and 
were exploited in the commercial sex industry. Many children left school and 
engaged in agricultural or domestic work to help meet expenses or perform the 
work of absent or sick parents, a situation common throughout the country. The 
problem was particularly acute among the large orphan population. According to 
UNICEF's State of the World's Children 2012 report, 41 percent of child laborers 
five to 14 years old were forced to work under poor conditions and poor health and 
safety standards. 

Also see the Department of Labor's Findings on the Worst Forms of Child Labor 
at www.dol.gov/ilab/programs/ocft/tda.htm . 

d. Acceptable Conditions of Work 

The minimum legal wage was set in 1984 at 6,000 shillings ($2.23) per month. In 
2003 the government and the private sector negotiated a new rate of 54,000 
shillings ($20.10) per month, which the government had not implemented by 
year's end. 

In industries that employed workers on an hourly basis, the normal workweek was 
40 hours. The legal maximum workweek is 48 hours, and the maximum workday 
is 10 hours per day. The law may extend the workweek to 56 hours per week, 
including overtime, with employee agreement. An employee may work in excess 
of 10 hours a day if the average number of hours over a period of three weeks does 
not exceed 10 hours per day or 56 hours per week. The law provides for an 
employee who works in excess of 48 hours per week to be remunerated at the 
minimum rate of 1 .5 times the normal hourly rate for the overtime hours and two 
times the hourly rate on public holidays. The law grants employees a 30-minute 



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break for every eight-hour work shift. For every four months of continuous 
employment, an employee is entitled to seven days of paid annual leave. Many 
industries paid workers annual bonuses in lieu of overtime. Section 53 (8) of the 
Employment Act 2006 allows compulsory overtime for all workers. In July 201 1 
the Uganda Local Government Workers Union petitioned the Constitutional Court, 
protesting discrimination in remuneration of employees doing the same work. 
Hearing of the petition was pending at year's end. 

The law establishes occupational safety and health standards, and the Ministry of 
Gender, Labor, and Social Development's Department of Occupational Health is 
responsible for enforcement of those regulations. The law covers all workers, 
including foreign and migrant workers. The law includes provisions for district 
labor inspectors to "secure the enforcement of legal provisions relating to 
conditions of work and the protection of workers while engaged in their work." 

Authorities did not effectively enforce the law due to the lack of vehicles and 
financial constraints. As a result the Ministry of Labor, Gender, and Social 
Development's Occupational, Safety and Health Department carried out few 
inspections during the year. Workers in the informal sector were subject to 
hazardous working conditions. There was no credible data available on the 
number of workers in the informal sector. 

NOTU officials recorded two deaths and five injuries during the year due to poor 
safety practices at several construction projects. 



Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2012 
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor